A better half to Buddhist Philosophy is the main entire unmarried quantity at the topic on hand; it deals the very newest scholarship to create a wide-ranging survey of crucial rules, difficulties, and debates within the heritage of Buddhist philosophy.

• Encompasses the broadest therapy of Buddhist philosophy to be had, protecting social and political suggestion, meditation, ecology and modern matters and applications

• every one part comprises overviews and state-of-the-art scholarship that expands readers knowing of the breadth and variety of Buddhist thought

• wide insurance of subject matters permits flexibility to teachers in making a syllabus

• Essays supply worthwhile replacement philosophical views on themes to these to be had in Western traditions

This publication examines the family members among Buddhism and Christianity within the context
of our rising international civilization. It illuminates particularly the best way Theravada
Buddhism doesn't healthy universal theories approximately faith and doesn't match
Christian (or Muslim or Jewish or Hindu) trust in God. The assumptions of the
two faiths are very diverse certainly. How then do we conceive them as bearing on?

Extra resources for A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy (Blackwell Companions to Philosophy)

Example text

Second edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 10 Part I Conceptual Foundations 1 The Philosophical Context of Gotama’s Thought STEPHEN J. LAUMAKIS Some Fundamental Problems Although it is de rigueur to begin any account of Buddhism with the “received” biography of its founder, Siddhattha Gotama, or, as he is more commonly known, the Buddha or the Awakened One, there are at least a half dozen fundamental problems with this practice. First, like Jesus and Socrates, the Buddha never wrote anything – about either himself or his teachings.

Seeds and Fruit: Actions and their Consequences Consider, for a moment, the same data of experience that we have been highlighting, especially in an agricultural community setting. The sun rises and sets, the moon waxes and wanes, the tides rise and fall, and the seasons come and go in relative order and stability. Humans, plants, and animals are born, grow, mature, and die. Humans interact with one another and the world around themselves, and events and outcomes seem to follow regular patterns.

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Mohanty, J. N. (2000) Classical Indian Philosophy. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Renard, J. (1999). 101 Questions and Answers on Buddhism. New York: Gramercy Books. Walshe, M. ) (1995). The Long Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of the Digha Nikaya. Boston: Wisdom. 163), the person who became known as “the Buddha” or “Awakened One” sought that which was in various ways beyond these. After his awakening/enlightenment experience, in which he is seen to have experienced that which is the unborn, unaging, unailing, deathless (Skt nirvāṇa; P.